Originally published Tuesday, June 9, 2009 at 12:41 PM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
Fla. fisherman hooks test missile in Gulf waters
A commercial fisherman unveiled a curious catch when he returned from an expedition through the Gulf of Mexico this week: A corroded missile that had been fired from an F-15 fighter jet.
A commercial fisherman unveiled a curious catch when he returned from an expedition through the Gulf of Mexico this week: A corroded missile that had been fired from an F-15 fighter jet.
Fisherman Rodney Salomon hooked the missile about 50 miles off the Panhandle town of Panama City and then kept it on his boat, the Broad Venture, for ten days. Salomon hoped to keep it as a souvenir, but took precautions because he didn't know if it was live.
"I had it secure. I keep it cool," he said, adding that he packed it with ice.
Local authorities first said the projectile was live and unstable, but Eglin Air Force Base later said it was a telemetry missile that carried no explosives. Still, the MacDill Air Force Base Bomb Squad inspected and dismantled the missile after Salomon returned to port on Monday evening in Madeira Beach, near St. Petersburg.
Eglin spokesman Samuel King said the bomb squad was needed to retrieve and dispose of sensitive technology used to measure and transmit data on the missile, which was fired in August 2004 from an F-15 fighter jet during a test.
"Once we found out it was ours, our guidance was that it needed to be destroyed," King said.
The Air Force and Navy use Gulf waters off the Panhandle for weapons training. King said that the weapons evaluation group tests about 300 missiles over the Gulf each year.
Salomon told authorities he had seen other missiles in the same area and asked if he could keep his catch once it had been dismantled. The request was denied.
Copyright © The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 10:01 AM
Rebels tighten hold on Libya oil port
UPDATE - 09:29 AM
Reality leads US to temper its tough talk on Libya
UPDATE - 09:38 AM
2 Ark. injection wells may be closed amid quakes
Armed guards save Dutch couple from Somali pirates
Navy to release lewd video investigation findings

general classifieds
Garage & estate salesFurniture & home furnishings
Electronics
just listed
More listings
POST A FREE LISTING
- Fasting woman to end attempt to ‘live on light’
- Ride-share cars: illegal, and all over Seattle
- Everett may be left out of 787-10 plans
- Report: NHL’s Phoenix Coyotes could move to Seattle if local deal fails
- ‘I don’t want to be only person cured of HIV’
- Mastros defend their actions, plan to ‘retire in peace’
- Supreme Court: Pre-Miranda silence can be used as evidence of guilt
- Teen cyclist hit, killed in charity ride
- Too early to claim Xbox defeat just from E3 buzz
- 2 charged with stealing 4.3 miles of copper wire from Sound Transit
- Game thread: time for Mariners to surprise people
303 - Court: Ariz. citizenship proof law illegal
100 - Justin Smoak tries to save Mariners, reputation of young 'core'
95 - Justin Smoak appears headed up to rejoin reeling Mariners
94 - Taxi drivers stage a protest parade
88 - Woman trying to ‘live on light’ instead of food ends experiment
76 - Most hate their jobs or have ‘checked out,’ Gallup says
47 - A choice to be single in Seattle
46 - Mariners destroyed in Anaheim again
44 - $231 million revenue jump could help break state budget stalemate
44
- Ride-share cars: illegal, and all over Seattle
- One tough old bird rules the parking lot
- Got a great buy on a cruise? That’s not all you’ll spend
- It’s curtains for Seattle’s Egyptian Theatre
- Fasting woman to end attempt to ‘live on light’
- Everett may be left out of 787-10 plans
- ‘I don’t want to be only person cured of HIV’
- Weyerhaeuser pays $2.6B to snag Longview Timber
- Fifth-grader’s poem wins national contest
- Mastros defend their actions, plan to ‘retire in peace’
